On Fri, Aug 24, 2018 at 2:47 AM Boris Brezillon <boris.brezillon@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, 14 Aug 2018 17:05:29 +0200 > Peter Rosin <peda@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >>>>>> @@ -77,13 +79,29 @@ static int atmel_hlcdc_attach_endpoint(struct drm_device *dev, int endpoint) > > >>>>>> > > >>>>>> int atmel_hlcdc_create_outputs(struct drm_device *dev) > > >>>>>> { > > >>>>>> - int endpoint, ret = 0; > > >>>>>> - > > >>>>>> - for (endpoint = 0; !ret; endpoint++) > > >>>>>> - ret = atmel_hlcdc_attach_endpoint(dev, endpoint); > > >>>>>> + struct of_endpoint endpoint; > > >>>>>> + struct device_node *node = NULL; > > >>>>>> + int count = 0; > > >>>>>> + int ret = 0; > > >>>>>> + > > >>>>>> + for_each_endpoint_of_node(dev->dev->of_node, node) { > > >>>>>> + of_graph_parse_endpoint(node, &endpoint); > > >>> > > >>> I'd really like to kill off of_graph_parse_endpoint, not add more > > >>> users (check the git history on this code). You should know what are > > >>> possible port and endpoint numbers, so iterate over those. > > >> > > >> So, add a comment to that effect in the docs of the of_graph_parse_endpoint > > >> function. > > >> > > >> How can the hlcdc driver know the actual number of endpoints? It's a > > >> one-way signal path out from that port, and it can easily be routed to > > >> 1, 2, 3 or even more places. As shown above, forcing the endpoint id > > >> to start at zero is a nuisance, and I don't see the point of it. > > >> > > >> But I welcome suggestions on how to arrange the above dtsi/dts fragments > > >> in a world where the endpoint id absolutely has to start at zero. > > > > > > Your dts file arrangement seems fine. Can't you just not exit the loop > > > on -ENODEV? IOW, just iterate til you find an enabled endpoint. > > > > That would regress cases where two (or more) endpoints are enabled > > (which is currently supported). As I see it, the driver will have a > > very hard time knowing when to stop iterating with any solution not > > involving the equivalent of the functions for_each_endpoint_of_node > > and of_graph_parse_endpoint. Open-coding of_graph_parse_endpoint just > > to avoid it is a bit more than silly IMHO... > > I agree, and actually, I think this is Rob who suggested to do what we > do here :-) (iterate from 0 to X, and stop as soon as > -ENODEV is returned). By suggested, you mean implemented because that is what it currently does. My suggestion now is to do this: for (endpoint = 0; endpoint < SOME_REASONABLE_MAX_NUMBER_OF_ENDPOINTS; endpoint++) { ret = atmel_hlcdc_attach_endpoint(dev, endpoint); if (ret == -ENODEV) continue; // handle other errors? } And SOME_REASONABLE_MAX_NUMBER_OF_ENDPOINTS is something you make up based on how many connections any board will have and physics (I suppose you could have trees worth of buffers, but really what is the worst case in an actual board design?). I would think 4 would be plenty. If not, double it to 8. Rob _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel